175
Prove that: $\frac{\sin A + \cos A}{\sin A - \cos A} + \frac{\sin A - \cos A}{\sin A + \cos A} = \frac{2}{2 \sin^2 A - 1}$
Show SolutionHide Solution↓
LHS $= \frac{(\sin A + \cos A)^2 + (\sin A - \cos A)^2}{(\sin A - \cos A)(\sin A + \cos A)} = \frac{\sin^2 A + \cos^2 A + 2 \sin A \cos A + \sin^2 A + \cos^2 A - 2 \sin A \cos A}{\sin^2 A - \cos^2 A} = \frac{1 + 1}{\sin^2 A - (1 - \sin^2 A)} = \frac{2}{2 \sin^2 A - 1} = \text{RHS}$.